Let’s say that you happen to hate sports. Yes, every Super Bowl Sunday is a chore, you wish there were something better to watch on TV most Monday nights, and you couldn’t care less about March Madness. Maybe you’re just not an athletic person. Maybe you have harrowing memories from playing T-ball. Or maybe you just find sports boring. Well, surely the magic of cinema can fix that for you! Here are ten movies for people who hate sports. Take caution: you might find yourself cheering along for a team and hoping someone “scores,” or whatever.

'A League of Their Own' (1992)

Photo: Columbia Pictures; Courtesy Everett Collection

There’s no better movie about sports for people who care nothing about sports. Based on the real story of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, A League of Their Own stars Geena Davis and Lori Petty as sisters who play for the Rockford Peaches (alongside Madonna, no less). It also happens to feature a particularly famous line uttered by Tom Hanks. Perhaps you’ve heard it? [GoWatchIt]

'Field of Dreams' (1989)

Photo: Universal Pictures; Courtesy Everett Collection

Field of Dreams is not really a movie about baseball — it’s a cinematic conspiracy to get grown men to weep. Kevin Costner stars in this Oscar-nominated film about a man who listens to the mysterious voice coming from his cornfield and builds a baseball field on his farm so that the sad ghosts of the disgraced Chicago White Sox can once again play the game. [GoWatchIt]

'The Mighty Ducks' (1992)

Photo: Buena Vista; Courtesy Everett Collection

Who doesn’t love a ragtag team of awkward and unathletic teens who band together and somehow manage to prove how great they are while still learning a lesson or two about confidence and self-acceptance? Bonus: The Mighty Ducks became a real hockey team for adult men. The ’90s were weird! [GoWatchIt]

'She's the Man' (2006)

Photo: Dreamworks Pictures; Courtesy Everett Collection

It’s about soccer (and even features former footballer Vinnie Jones in a supporting role), but it’s really just Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night in disguise. Come for the soccer, stay for Amanda Bynes in drag and a baby Channing Tatum. [GoWatchIt]

'Bull Durham' (1988)

Photo: Orion Pictures; Courtesy Everett Collection

Is it a movie about low-rent minor league baseball players, or is it a movie about boning low-rent minor league baseball players? Well, why can’t it be both? Kevin Costner and Tim Robbins star in this romantic comedy about a veteran catcher who is tasked with mentoring his team’s rookie pitcher — which falls by the wayside when the two start sleeping with the team’s biggest fan (played by Susan Sarandon). [GoWatchIt]

'Million Dollar Baby' (2004)

Photo: Warner Bros.; Courtesy Everett Collection

Clint Eastwood directs himself, Hillary Swank, and Morgan Freeman in this Oscar-winning drama. You think you’re getting a lady-boxing movie, but half-way through you realize that old Clint has hoodwinked you and suddenly you’re thinking a lot about mercy killings. [GoWatchIt]

'The Karate Kid' (1984)

Photo: Columbia Pictures; Courtesy Everett Collection

You can forget the Jaden Smith-starring remake from a few years ago and stick to this classic. Ralph Macchio and Pat Morita star in this movie about a bullied teen who gains instruction in martial arts from his local neighborhood karate master. While it’s about karate, it also features a lot of car waxing. [GoWatchIt]

'Rudy' (1993)

Photo: TriStar Pictures; Courtesy Everett Collection

Anyone who spent a week of eighth grade PE trying to avoid injury on the flag-football field (that’s a totally hypothetical situation and in no way close to any event in my life) probably can’t relate to the idea of a scrappy young guy just desperate to play football, but Rudy is the kind of underdog story that appeals to anyone who sets out to prove himself worthy of achieving a goal. [GoWatchIt]

'Raging Bull' (1980)

Photo: United Artists; Courtesy Everett Collection

Raging Bull earned Robert De Niro his second Oscar, this time for playing the real-life boxer Jake LaMotta. Martin Scorcese’s biopic shows how the brutality of LaMotta’s athletic prowess made him a king inside the boxing ring, but his personal life was beleaguered with his own self-destructive emotional demons. [GoWatchIt]

"Brian's Song" 1971 was n the list. I was present at St. Joseph's College in Rensselaer,Indiana where the exterior shots were filmed. SJC was the summer training camp of the Chicago Bears football team. George Hallas was a major financial supporter of the college whose beginnings go back to 1868.